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As crowds increase we build our forts of inattention, and the more we talk the easier it is to mean little and listen not at all.
Frank Moore Colby
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Frank Moore Colby
Age: 60 †
Born: 1865
Born: January 1
Died: 1925
Died: January 1
Author
Historian
Writer
Washington
District of Columbia
Little
Forts
Mean
Crowds
Increase
Build
Listen
Easier
Talk
Littles
Inattention
More quotes by Frank Moore Colby
I know of no more disagreeable sensation than to be left feeling generally angry without anybody in particular to be angry at.
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Literary people are forever judging the quality of the mind by the turn of expression.
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By rights, satire is a lonely and introspective occupation, for nobody can describe a fool to the life without much patient self-inspection.
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The world is a play that would not be worth seeing if we knew the plot.
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Many people lose their tempers merely from seeing you keep yours.
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One learns little more about a man from the feats of his literary memory than from the feats of his alimentary canal.
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Fill an author with a titanic fame and you do not make him titanic you often merely burst him.
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Persecution was at least a sign of personal interest. Tolerance is composed of nine parts of apathy to one of brotherly love.
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When temptations march monotonously in regiments, one waits for to pass.
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There ought to be some sign in a book about man, that the writer knows thoroughly one man at least.
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Men will confess to treason, murder, arson, false teeth, or a wig. How many of them will own up to a lack of humor?
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Women singly do a good deal of harm. Women in bulk are chastening.
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Clever people seem not to feel the natural pleasure of bewilderment, and are always answering questions when the chief relish of a life is to go on asking them.
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Politics is a place of humble hopes and strangely modest requirements, where all are good who are not criminal and all are wise who are not ridiculously otherwise.
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The New York playgoer is a child of nature, and he has an honest and wholesome regard of whatever is atrocious in art.
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Distaste sounds more emphatic when expressed as moral disapproval. With most of us the moral counterblast is nothing more than the angry rendering of a yawn.
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